
I can confirm caddy is more of a high availability proxy than a proper load balancer, but it does it’s job and has an api you can hook up to a gui if you want. Or like I do - to a config repo with ci/cd deployment.

I can confirm caddy is more of a high availability proxy than a proper load balancer, but it does it’s job and has an api you can hook up to a gui if you want. Or like I do - to a config repo with ci/cd deployment.
You may be surprised but a private (self-hosted) torrent tracker is how I did this when I had crappy internet and had to send over a bunch of pictures and video to family.
You can encrypt the data before sending, although it still should be fairly safe, speeds don’t matter much, there’s no storage to pay for or risk leaking.
I might get physical in that sitiation. And I’m very tame.
Haha I literally thought of this exactly, Garry’s Mod. Why do I need this tortoise crap, just gimme a zip. Ah, summer child.
There’s dozens of us!
Duh, the Devil helped it’s in the name.
With properly configured subvolumes, I’ll allow it.
Most commands are the same. They recommend just aliasing docker to podman so you can keep using your old commands.
This comment tought me more about PSUs and UPSs than my entire experience in IT in a very concise way. Good one.
He heck is HHD+? Is this some new fangled storage tech I’m too SSD to understand?

Yeah I see. I don’t know if I can help, as I’ve only used caddy outside of podman, as a separate machine, pointing back to my services.
Why, will they jump me from a bush?

Please confirm for me, the client traffic looks like proxy is the source on the containered services?
I haven’t had that issue with caddy before, but may be I’m using some particular config to make sure it always passes the client IP.
Some services also need a setting to “know” they are behind a proxy and should look for client address in the headers like x-forwarded-for.
Git revert --hard no need to copy anything
Can confirm, gitlab has a container registry built in, at least in the omnibus package installation.
Am I the only guy that likes doing devops that has both dev and ops experience and insight? What’s with silosing oneself?
Fucking finances and their macro-enabled excel spreadsheets!
As a Fedora user that used to use Arch, yeah, wisdom comes from experience. Arch is not bad experience, I just kinda got tired of it.
Because actually writing code is the least important part of programming.